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Argentinian prosecutor suicided over government cover up of Iran outrage? - Printable Version

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Argentinian prosecutor suicided over government cover up of Iran outrage? - Peter Lemkin - 04-02-2015

While not likely [and not what I suspect at this time], one must consider that the arrest warrant in the garbage was planted there. This is very obviously involving intelligence black bag and quite possibly 'wet' operations. Wheels within wheels will be the easy explanation, when it is unraveled, IMO.


Argentinian prosecutor suicided over government cover up of Iran outrage? - Lauren Johnson - 04-02-2015

Quote:A draft warrant for the arrest of Argentinian President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner has been found at the apartment of Alberto Nisman, the prosecutor found dead one day before testifying against Kirchner's alleged role in covering up a deadly bombing.

Hmmm. A draft of an arrest warrant? Takes weeks to find it in his apartment? Next thing they will find is her order a ton of yellow cake. Not buying it.


Argentinian prosecutor suicided over government cover up of Iran outrage? - Peter Lemkin - 04-02-2015

Lauren Johnson Wrote:
Quote:A draft warrant for the arrest of Argentinian President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner has been found at the apartment of Alberto Nisman, the prosecutor found dead one day before testifying against Kirchner's alleged role in covering up a deadly bombing.

Hmmm. A draft of an arrest warrant? Takes weeks to find it in his apartment? Next thing they will find is her order a ton of yellow cake. Not buying it.

It does sound odd....finding it so late [or releasing the information late] we don't really know. I had heard too it was torn in half and thrown in the waste basket. Possible, but unlikely. One would, if they felt they had reason to, write such a warrant [or draft] and keep it in one's papers. If one draft was 'thrown away' it would only be to have a better written one in one's papers - but maybe there was and it was taken by those who killed him; unaware of the other in the garbage. However, many other scenarios are possible. This is really one I think almost no one on any side of this will believe the 'story' or 'stories' of.


Argentinian prosecutor suicided over government cover up of Iran outrage? - Lauren Johnson - 05-02-2015

from Who What and Why:

Quote:The death of Argentinian prosecutor Alberto Nisman couldn't be more like the opening scenes of a Hollywood thriller.
A man investigating a horrific terrorist attack dies under suspicious circumstances, the day before he's supposed to give damning testimony to the nation's legislature about a cover-up reaching all the way to the top. A gun is found next to him, and his usual security detail just happened to be off that night. Investigators find a draft arrest warrant for the president at the scene.

In fact, were it a movie, critics would be screaming about the plot holes, the almost hackneyed characters and the surfeit of red herrings.

Yet the real-world case has drawn in the president of Argentina and unearthed layers of deep politics stretching from Buenos Aires to Tehran. It has also given birth to a fast-growing thorn bush of assertions, retractions, accusations, apparent disappearances and global political intrigues.

The story started with curious timing. Less than 24 hours before Nisman was scheduled to his give explosive testimony to an investigatory subcommittee of the Argentine Congress, he was found with a fatal gunshot wound to his right temple. His body was in the bathroom of his locked 13[SUP]th[/SUP] floor apartment in Argentina's capital city of Buenos Aires. At his side were a Bersa .22 caliber handgun and a single shell casing. It was January 18.

From Suicide to Murder
Looks like suicide, right? The lead investigator in the case, Viviana Fein, initially said so. And so did Argentine President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner.

Suddenly, both the president and the lead investigator reversed course and declared Nisman's death a case of murder. In an extraordinary letter posted on her official website on January 22, President Fernandez said Nisman the victim of rogue spies who used him to discredit her government. Fein also reversed her position.
[Image: Cristina_Fernandez_300x215-300x215.jpg]Argentine President Christina Fernandez de Kirchner

Even more curiously, Fein said that investigators had indeed found a draft arrest warrant for the president and her foreign minister among Nisman's papers. She initially denied it existed. Clarin, a newspaper that has often criticized Fernandez' government, first reported that it had been found in Nisman's files.

Why is that important? In chief, because the whodunit in this case has the potential to shift the balance of Argentine power at the topmost levels. Further, the geopolitical actors involved have competing interests, which must be factored into any analysis of what is presented as a fact.

So with the stakes as high as they can get, control of the narrative is crucial.

Argentines are riveted by the case, and many are entirely skeptical of the suicide explanation. Three out of four people surveyed thought that Nisman had been murderedpresumably to prevent him from exposing the government's failure to identify the terrorists who carried out a horrific bombing in Buenos Aires two decades ago.

The Unsolved Bombing
Before his death, Nisman had spent more than a decade investigating the July 1994 bombing of the Asociación Mutual Israelita Argentina (the Argentine-Israeli Mutual Association), known as AMIA. The bombing, the worst act of terrorism in Argentina's history, killed 85 and injured hundreds more.

What drew Nisman's prosecutorial attention was the suspiciously laggard response of government officials, who seemed more interested in burying the facts than bringing the perpetrators to justice.

In a 280-page legal complaint, Nisman accused President Fernández, and members of her cabinet and staff of covering up the truth about the AMIA bombing. Some observers have questioned whether the complaint itself is legally sound.

The truth, Nisman claimed, was that Iranian-directed terrorists had blown up the Jewish center in retaliation for Argentina's 1994 decision to cancel a nuclear-technology sharing agreement with Iran.

"I Might Wind Up Dead"
So why would any Argentine government try to hide Iran's involvement in the Buenos Aires bombing? Because, Nisman charged, President Kirchner was more interested in concluding a "secret deal" with Tehran to exchange Argentinian grain and beef for cheap oil from Iran.

The 51-year old Nisman was well aware that pursuing a case against officials of his own country's government was putting himself at risk. None of the 10 armed guards he had been assigned were at his apartment the night he was found dead.

Only a few days before, Nisman had told journalist Natasha Niebieskikwiat of Clarin: "Yo puedo salir muerto de ésto." (Imight wind up dead from this.)

He had borrowed a gun from an assistant after being warned that he was in danger. The warning came from the former chief of operations of Argentina's Intelligence Secretariat, Antonio Stiusso. The prosecutor and the spy worked together closely on the bombing probe. President Fernandez recently fired Stiusso, long considered one of Argentina's most powerful and feared figures because of his extensive files on the country's political players.

As theories and counter-theories about Nisman's death multiplied, the president withdrew her original support of the suicide finding. One fact casting doubt on the suicide theory was the investigators' failure to find powder residue on his handalthough some experts contended this might be explained by the small caliber of the gun.

Enter the Rogue Spooks
President Fernandez suggested that Nisman was a victim of rogue intelligence agents, who had fed him false information to throw suspicion on her government and then killed him to ensure his silence.

Although she did not name the mastermind behind this alleged conspiracy, her aides subsequently implied it was Stiusso, once the president's close ally and now her political enemy. But no charges have been filed against him.
[Image: jaime_antonio_stiusso-300x225.jpg]Argentine spy Antonio Stiusso

Even if the government wanted to question him, they would have to find him first. He has apparently fled the country, and his whereabouts are unknown.

Meanwhile, the president has announced plans to reform the Intelligence Secretariat, an organization whose origins go back to 1946. Then-dictator Juan Peron created it and recruited former officials from Nazi Germany to serve his government.

While Argentina remains gripped by the question of who killed Prosecutor Alberto Nisman, the larger international issues at stake have only begun to surface.

To unpack them, it's necessary to ask the key question: Cui bono? Who benefits? Whose interests are served by the death of Prosecutor Alberto Nisman? Right now, it's hard to say but here's a by-no-means-complete list of possibilities:
The President and Her Allies: If Fernández and her government have in fact been pursuing a shady deal with Iran, trading justice for oil, they would certainly benefit from Nisman's silence. But as the events of last week have shown, the blowback from such a high-profile assassination was bound to be fierce. It's hard to understand why they would risk it, especially when independent analysts believe that Nisman's accusations are unlikely to lead to legal action against the government.
The President's Enemies: Those could include members of the opposition, as well as the missing spy, Stiusso. It is possible that he and his allies in the intelligence service are looking for revenge after his firing by the president.
Iran: Another possible beneficiary is Iran. At a time when the Iranians are trying to normalize relations with the West in an attempt to get economic sanctions lifted, they would not want new attention focused on a terrorist act allegedly carried out by operatives under Iranian direction. But by the same token, would the supposedly "moderate" government in Tehran risk exposure in the killing of a law-enforcement official in a supposedly "friendly" country?
The United States: According to leaked diplomatic cables, Nisman had been influenced to restrict his attention to Iran, despite some who believed there were better suspects available. Certainly, the shift of Fernandez' government away from the West and toward allies Iran was not lost on Washington. Perhaps, as Santiago O'Donnell, the foreign editor of Argentina's Página/12, told WhoWhatWhy, Nisman's charges were less than persuasive. If this were the case, the collapse of his case could undercut the U.S. position on Iran.
Israel: Israel has been none-too-pleased that the perpetrators of the attack have gone unpunished for so long. Further aggravating the situation was Fernandez' announcement in 2013 that she would establish a joint truth commission with Iran. Another theory is that Nisman is a victim of a tit-for-tat assassination feud between the Israeli and Iranian intelligence services.
Syria: Nisman had once planned to arrest former Argentine President Carlos Menem, who was born to Syrian immigrants and had ties to former Syrian President Hafez Al-Assad. Assad gave him financial support, but cut it off when Argentina joined the U.S. in 1991's Operation Desert Storm in Iraq. The next year, Israel's embassy in Argentina was attacked, and two years later, AMIA was bombed. In one leaked 2008 U.S. diplomatic cable, Nisman expressed his intent to arrest Menem for covering up the "local connection" to the AMIA blast.

One thing is clear: the truth about Alberto Nisman's death remains as unsure as the truth about the 1994 bombing he investigated for so long. Argentine political scientist Nicolás Teruschuk put it this way: "In order to make sense of shocking situations, the first thing that must be done is to put all the pieces of the puzzle on the table."

Before the story of Nisman's death can be untangled, it may prove necessary to keep adding leaves to that table.



Argentinian prosecutor suicided over government cover up of Iran outrage? - Tracy Riddle - 05-02-2015

Chris Hayes was talking about this on MSNBC tonight, and his head was practically exploding because apparently this was his first introduction to Deep Politics.


Argentinian prosecutor suicided over government cover up of Iran outrage? - Lauren Johnson - 05-02-2015

Tracy Riddle Wrote:Chris Hayes was talking about this on MSNBC tonight, and his head was practically exploding because apparently this was his first introduction to Deep Politics.


::laughingdog::


Argentinian prosecutor suicided over government cover up of Iran outrage? - Albert Doyle - 05-02-2015

Caught the tail end of that piece. Chris Matthews looked flustered.


Rogue agents my....


MSNBC was saying how the democrats want to make sure Homeland Security is funded.


Argentinian prosecutor suicided over government cover up of Iran outrage? - Magda Hassan - 22-02-2015

Argentina charges US interference in crisis over prosecutor's death

By Rafael Azul
21 February 2015
The political crisis precipitated by the mysterious January 18 death of Alberto Nisman has continued to deepen after a mass march called by fellow prosecutors and backed by the government's right-wing opponents drew large crowds into the streets of Buenos Aires Wednesday to mark one month since the Argentine federal prosecutor was found with a fatal bullet wound to his head.
Supporters of the government of President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner denounced the march as a maneuver of the political right and forces within the state apparatus aimed at bringing about a "soft coup," while charging that foreign governmentsparticularly Washingtonhave attempted to manipulate the case to pursue their own geostrategic interests.
A week before his death, Nisman had announced that he would accuse Fernandez de Kirchner, Foreign Minister Hector Timerman and other officials as well as employees of intelligence services of making an illegal and secret agreement with the government of Iran to protect Iranian "spies" who were allegedly involved in the 1994 suicide car bombing at the Argentina Israelite Mutual Association (AMIA) building that killed 85 people. Nisman had produced a 290-page report about the case, and among papers found in his apartment were requests for criminal warrants against both Fernandez de Kirchner and Timerman.
While there is no evidence that Nisman was murderedforensic reports on the bullet's path are consistent with an act of suicidethere is widespread skepticism in Argentine society that Nisman took his own life. This is not only a matter of the timing of his death, but also long experience with political and judicial corruption and impunity for state criminals, going back to those who carried out the mass killings, disappearances and torture under the former military dictatorship.
While undoubtedly such sentiments found expression in the February 18 demonstration, dubbed a "march of silence," those who played the key role in organizing it are themselves fully complicit in this corruption and impunity, including the federal attorneys, veterans themselves of cover-ups and frame-ups of workers and the left.
On the eve of Wednesday's march, a White House spokesman stated that the Obama administration is "concerned" about the issues arising from Nisman's death and is continuing to "monitor closely" the events in Argentina.
Florida Senator Marco Rubio and other congressional Republicans have called for an international investigation into Nisman's death and for sanctions against Argentina unless it severs ties with Iran. Nisman had ties to Rubio, who invited him to testify before a Senate panel, before the visit was barred by the Argentine government.
In a letter to US Secretary of State John Kerry on Tuesday, Foreign Minister Timerman declared that Argentina would not tolerate being turned into a "theater for operations of politics, intelligence or, even worse, more serious actions, because of conflicts that are completely unconnected with its history."
This rhetoric, however, was belied by Timerman's proposal in the same letter that the US raise the issue of the 1994 bombing in its talks with Iran on the latter's nuclear program, effectively subordinating Argentina to US imperialist maneuvers with Iran.
Nisman was appointed in 2004 by President Nestor Kirchner (the current president's late husband) to head up the investigation of the 1994 bombing and had produced documents that charged the president and other government officials with cover-up and a secret agreement with Iran to impede the investigation and protect the alleged perpetrators.
Nisman collaborated in the investigation with SIDE (now renamed SI), a notorious and powerful intelligence and secret police agency that played a role in the savage repression of the working class and left-wing youth in Argentina, as well as in the infamous "Plan Condor," collaborating with the CIA in chasing down exiled political opponents of the military fascist dictatorships in Brazil, Chile and Uruguay. Nisman worked with SIDE chief Jaime Antonio Stiuso, who had been with the agency since 1972.
Fernandez de Kirchner has accused Stiuso of directing and manipulating Nisman (and perhaps murdering him) for his own political purposes. Stiuso is now in hiding. According to the Madrid daily El País, Nisman came forward with his indictmentwidely described as a political documentright after Stiuso was fired from SIDE last December and amid fears that a prosecutor aligned with the government would replace him.
That SIDE and elements like Stiuso continued to wield power within the state more than three decades after the end of the military dictatorship is a damning indictment of all the civilian governments that followed, including that of Fernandez de Kirchner. All of them bowed to the repressive apparatus, while also relying upon it to defend the state and both foreign and Argentine capital against the working class.
The intimate involvement of foreign intelligence agencies in the case is undeniable. These included the Israeli Mossad, as well as the US CIA and FBI. Nisman and SIDE worked in close contact with these agenciesin SIDE's case before and after the AMIA bombing.
While the Lebanese Islamic Jihad claimed responsibility for a 1992 bombing of the Israeli embassy in Buenos Aires, the group had largely been dissolved by this point. Both it and the AMIA attack suspiciously coincided with negotiations between Argentina and Iran on a resumption of nuclear cooperation (Argentina had suspended shipments of nuclear material a few months before the embassy bombing). There are suspicions that the bombings were carried out with the aim of disrupting Argentine-Iranian relations.
During the course of the AMIA bombing investigation it came to light that SIDE had received warnings from the Brazilian intelligence service, as well as Argentine consulates in Milan and Beirut, that an attack on AMIA was in the works and allowed it to happen. In the aftermath of these bombings, however, SIDE (discredited by its role under the dictatorship, and having suffered substantial cuts in its personnel and budget) was reconfigured as an "anti-terrorist" agency, assuming greater powers with restored funds.
There exists ample evidence of the continuing presence of anti-Semitic elements in the Argentine armed forces and police, and in SIDE itself. Those elements, which were given free reign under military rule, now sense a change in the political climate. The Nisman crisis has brought out of the woodwork these openly fascistic elements (in recent days, leaflets were brazenly distributed in Jewish neighborhoods in Buenos Aires that read "the only good Jew is a dead Jew; Nisman = good Jew," while Nazi symbols were painted on the walls of buildings in the area). Argentina has the sixth largest Jewish population in the world.
Right-wing opposition parties, meanwhile, are blocking legislation to abolish SIDE and create a new intelligence agency.
There is a parallel between SIDE and the American CIA. The terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 in the US were carried out by persons known to US intelligence, just as SIDE had known about the impending AMIA bombing. The political establishment is, in both cases, dominated by the intelligence apparatus and determined to prevent any real accounting for these events.

https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2015/02/21/arge-f21.html


Argentinian prosecutor suicided over government cover up of Iran outrage? - Magda Hassan - 07-03-2015

Alberto Nisman: Down the rabbit hole we go

This will run and run. Today the ex-wife of killed (murdered?/suicide?) public prosecutor Alberto Nisman, herself a judge in Argentina, held a press conference in which she stated that after examining the forensic evidence available she was certain that her ex-husband was murdered. She cited evidence from the gun shot that killed him (including the lack of residue found on Nisman's hand, the trajectory of the bullet) as well as stating that the body had been moved after death and that the government's conclusion about the time of death were wrong. Uki Goñi, about the best English language reporter covering the country, has filed this report on today's happenings, which gives the facts as seen in the presser but does little to capture the commotion in Argentina today after the event.


IKN repeats: It's an election year in Argentina.

http://incakolanews.blogspot.com.au/2015/03/alberto-nisman-down-rabbit-hole-we-go.html


Argentinian prosecutor suicided over government cover up of Iran outrage? - Magda Hassan - 08-03-2015

The dramatic and world-headline making press conference held by the ex-wife of killed (murdered?suicide?) public prosecutor Alberto Nisman is already beginning to look shaky. At that highly covered presser last Thursday his ex-wife and Argentine judge Sandra Arroyo Salgado stated that according to the readings of the autopsy report (made by her and her team) Nisman was not killed in-situ or on the Sunday morning/midday that the government insist as time and place of death, but was killed the previous evening and then moved to the bathroom where he was found.
Ms Arroyo Salgado's problem is that she doesn't have all the information to hand. According to records (and before you start with the "yeah but..." interjections, this isn't just the gov't's info, but also telephone company and internet company info), the computer in Nisman's apartment was turned on at 8am Sunday morning and then used to check all the things that Nisman typically checked, including his Yahoo mail account and various newspapers.
Slight aside: IKN isn't going to start covering this story on a blow-by-blow basis, but today's is interesting because things such as facts are much less likely to be covered in the same media blanket as the "He was murdered!" presser we saw last week from Nisman's ex. That's because this case is highly political and as the CFK government has a whole stack of enemies both inside and outside of Argentina, you can guarantee that coverage isn't going to be free and fair. I still don't know whether Nisman committed suicide or was murdered and frankly, at this point nobody does. I suspect he committed suicide, but one mouthy guy with a blog's opinion is of zero importance and I'd be perfectly okay about being proved wrong on my current suspicions. Plus there's the "cui bono" factor, which offers very little if any 'bono' to the government of Argentina for his death. After all, his two year in the making case filed against the CFK government has already been shown as shaky, to say the least. It doesn't take Sherlock Holmes to work out that it would have been to the government's benefit to have had the chance to cross-examine Nisman on the facts of his case and shown both him and the world at the same time that his prosecution was built on false facts and statements.

From Otto at InkaKolaNews